Bucketing up the Wash - R H Postlethwaite and the Evolution of the Californian Style Gold Dredge

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 349 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
Politicians and economists talk glibly about the so-called knowledge revolution. The reality is that knowledge is fundamental to economic progress. Consequently there have been many technological revolutions. The global impacts of the invention of the steam engine and the development of the frozen meat industry are well known. Another less publicised technological advance occurred in Central Otago late in the nineteenth century. This was the adaptation of the bucketladder dredge to the mining of placer deposits. A product of over 30 years experimentation and innovation, New Zealand dredging technology was taken to the Risdon Iron and Locomotive Works, San Francisco by R H Postlethwaite, a Dunedin based mining engineer. New Zealand-style dredges built by Risdon operated successfully in California, Alaska and the Yukon. Californian engineers assimilated the best features of the New Zealand dredges with American (Bucyrus) designs to produce a standard for the worldwide placer mining industry.
Citation
APA: (2003) Bucketing up the Wash - R H Postlethwaite and the Evolution of the Californian Style Gold Dredge
MLA: Bucketing up the Wash - R H Postlethwaite and the Evolution of the Californian Style Gold Dredge. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2003.